An aircraft used for specialized services including agriculture, construction, photography, surveying, observation and patrol, search and rescue, advertising, etc.
For example, in European Union Aviation Safety Agency states[4] and the UK[5] it is possible to become a paid flight instructor with only a private pilot licence.
[7] For example, if a commercially licensed pilot flies a plane to visit a friend or attend a business meeting, this would be a private flight.
When a space weather event causes radiation exposure to exceed the safe level set by aviation authorities, the aircraft's flight path is diverted.
[15] ARMAS has flown hundreds of flights since 2013, mostly on research aircraft, and sent the data to the ground through Iridium satellite links.
The Air Commerce Act of 1926 began to regularize commercial aviation by establishing standards, facilitation, and promotion.
Writing for Collier's in 1929, he noted "Commercial aviation is the first industry inspired by hero-worship and built upon heros".
After his 1927 trans-Atlantic flight, Charles Lindbergh made a tour of the contiguous United States, paid for by the Daniel Guggenheim Foundation for the Promotion of Aeronautics.
From that point, commercial aviation took off: Roads were choked on Sundays, for weeks afterward, by motorists trying to get to Lambert Field, Lindbergh's home port in Saint Louis, to buy their first air hop.
[16]The Aeronautical Branch was charged with issuing commercial pilot licenses, airworthiness certificates, and with investigating air accidents.
After World War II, commercial aviation grew rapidly, using mostly ex-military aircraft to transport people and cargo.
Inspired by the major players such as the United States, the Soviet Union, Russia, France and Britain in the aviation industry[clarification needed].
[22] The introduction of the jet fighter F-80 by the US in 1945 pushed the Latin American countries even further away from development of aviation industry because it was simply expensive to recreate the sophisticated technology of F-80.
[24] Organizations who are socially responsible fulfill their triple bottom line obligations and dedicate efforts to minimize negative impact on stakeholders and shareholders.
Third, ethical responsibility of an organization to create and follow standards of right decision-making considering how it affects all the stakeholders.